Sanpitsu
The term Sanpitsu (三筆) or "three brushes" is used in Japanese to refer to a group of three famous Heian period calligraphers:
- Emperor Saga 嵯峨天皇, 786–842.
- Kūkai 空海, 774–835.
- Tachibana no Hayanari, 橘逸勢 c. 782-842.
Later groups of calligraphers were named in imitation of the original Sanpitsu.
Kan'ei Sanpitsu (寛永三筆)
Named for the Kan'ei period in which they flourished:
- Honami Kōetsu 本阿弥光悦, 1558-1637
- Konoe Nobutada 近衛信尹, 1565-1614
- Shōkadō Shōjō 松花堂昭乗, 1584-1639
Ōbaku no Sanpitsu (黄檗三筆)
Zen Chinese calligraphers who worked in Japan.
- Ingen Ryūki, 隱元隆琦 1592-1673
- Mokuan Shōtō,木庵性瑫 1611-1684
- Sokuhi Nyoitsu, 即非如一 1616-1671
Bakumatsu no Sanpitsu (幕末の三筆)
- Ichikawa Beian (市河米庵) 1779-1858
- Nukina Sūō (貫名菘翁) 1778-1863
- Maki Ryōko (巻菱湖) 1777-1843
Meiji no Sanpitsu (明治の三筆)
- Nakabayashi Gochiku (中林梧竹) 1827-1913
- Kusakabe Meikaku (日下部鳴鶴) 1838-1922
- Iwaya Ichiroku (巌谷一六) 1834-1905
Shōwa no Sanpitsu (昭和の三筆)
- Hibino Gohō (日比野五鳳) 1901-1985
- Teshima Yūkei (手島右卿) 1901-1987
- Nishikawa Yasushi (西川寧) 1902-1989
gollark: One somewhat convincing theory about that is that they just signal that you have some baseline level of sanity, conformity, ability to stick to things for a few years, etc.
gollark: *Hopefully* degrees and stuff are about somewhat more than just status?
gollark: Although if they're worse, it might be damaging.
gollark: I mean, theoretically you still have more total engineers available, which is a good thing, even if individuals might get less pay.
gollark: I mean, we're geographically Europe, and *politically* basically Europe still.
See also
- Sanseki, a similar group of renowned calligraphers
References
- 神田喜一郎,「三筆について」(書道全集 第11巻)(Heibonsha, 1965)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.